August 10, 2023 Quick space links
Courtesy of BtB’s stringer Jay.
- Virgin Galactic completes its first commercial tourist flight
This suborbital hop no longer rates more than a mention here in quick links. Compared to the growing orbital manned tourism, who cares that Branson’s con job has finally begin flying passengers, two decades late?
- Japanese startup Interstellar aims for orbital launch in 2025
Japan desperately needs some new independent launch companies, as the big space launch systems provided by JAXA and Mitsubishi have certainly not served that country’s private aerospace industry well.
- Viasat not ready to declare Viasat-3 Americas a total loss
The antenna turned out to be defective. There were stories that the company made an insurance claim, but I suspect this story reflects some pushback from that insurance company.
- Ingenuity’s next flight, its 55th, has been scheduled for some time today
The plan is to fly 820 feet for 134 seconds.
- JPL touts Curiosity images of mud polygons in Gale Crater
The full press release is here. Such features have been seen many times before on Mars, and this press release is merely rehashing a 2017 report.
Courtesy of BtB’s stringer Jay.
- Virgin Galactic completes its first commercial tourist flight
This suborbital hop no longer rates more than a mention here in quick links. Compared to the growing orbital manned tourism, who cares that Branson’s con job has finally begin flying passengers, two decades late?
- Japanese startup Interstellar aims for orbital launch in 2025
Japan desperately needs some new independent launch companies, as the big space launch systems provided by JAXA and Mitsubishi have certainly not served that country’s private aerospace industry well.
- Viasat not ready to declare Viasat-3 Americas a total loss
The antenna turned out to be defective. There were stories that the company made an insurance claim, but I suspect this story reflects some pushback from that insurance company.
- Ingenuity’s next flight, its 55th, has been scheduled for some time today
The plan is to fly 820 feet for 134 seconds.
- JPL touts Curiosity images of mud polygons in Gale Crater
The full press release is here. Such features have been seen many times before on Mars, and this press release is merely rehashing a 2017 report.